xorn
English
Etymology
First appeared in the original Dungeons & Dragons Monster Manual (1977).
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /zoɹn/, [zo̞ɹn]
Noun
- (fantasy) A fictional monster that devours earthen and silicate materials and can move freely through earth.
- 2002, David Damerell, “Where are they come from?[sic] ;)”, in rec.games.roguelike.development (Usenet):
- Various monsters can tunnel through rock - either humanoid monsters with picks or rock eaters like rock moles and umber hulks; and some monsters like xorns and ghosts can pass through it without digging.
- 2007, bear, “Makes Lovely Julienne Ogres....”, in rec.games.roguelike.angband (Usenet):
- Teleporting from an open room where there were a dozen black orcs firing bows at me and more pouring in through both doors a few nights ago didn't work the first two times, then when it did work it landed me, low on mana and hitpoints, in a room full of gnome mages who instantly summoned four umber hulks and a xorn!
- 2010, Roger Bourke White, Rostov Rising: The Tales of Baron Rostov, page 229:
- That afternoon, I summoned a Xorn—an earth elemental noted for its speed—and asked it to scout the caves of the Dragon's lair for me.
Anagrams
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